The intelligence function is characterised by being a cross-cutting function across the organisation, serving many other business functions, from innovation to talent management, and enabling organisational competitive intelligence.
Three of the areas of the company that make the most intensive use of competitive intelligence are marketing and sales, innovation, and strategic management.
The list of tactical and strategic decisions taken within a company is so broad and varied that it would be impossible to cover them all in a single article. So we will focus on the most common ones that the competitive intelligence function supports within the company.
The decisions to be taken in the marketing and sales area are sometimes clearly separated into tactical and strategic decisions, with some differences in each.
Tactical decisions are those fuelled by operational intelligence about what is happening right now. This is information that is consumed quickly and to which the directly involved team reacts.
Examples include:
Strategic decisions in marketing and sales are based on the continuous collection of information and the development of conclusions supported by that ongoing monitoring.
Some examples of strategic decisions are:
The innovation management area is one of those that makes more intensive use of competitive intelligence and technology watch. Here, some of our customers point to several decision-making processes that are supported by the intelligence function:
In addition, one example we must not forget in innovation decision-making is updating the technical team’s training plans: monitoring courses, conferences and other types of events, sector-related or technology-focused, that we can incorporate into the team’s knowledge-updating plans.
The concept of strategic management refers to certain decisions in areas that companies may cover across different functions, such as Internationalisation or Expansion, Corporate Venturing, etc. Let’s look at some of those key decisions supported by competitive intelligence:
Internationalisation confronts a company with many key decisions that must be taken with as much information and as high a quality as possible, such as:
Monitoring draft legislation in the destination countries is essential to obtain early warnings about changes that may affect our products or operations.
Mergers and acquisitions in the sector are always a focus of monitoring for the company’s strategic area. Choosing the right country and company to acquire must be supported by Intelligence work. Of course, these decisions will be influenced by the “merger & acquisitions” in which other sector agents are involved, such as competitors, suppliers and customers. Those M&A operations must be monitored continuously.
We must pay special attention to the confidentiality of this intelligence task, also within the organisation, because any leak could hinder or even cause this type of acquisition project to fail. Even if we have developed a distributed and collaborative intelligence function in the company, there are aspects of intelligence that must be especially confidential and not accessible to the whole analyst team.
Corporate venture capital initiatives have proliferated greatly in recent years. From banks to insurers, from food companies to automotive manufacturers or private universities, any company of a certain size has created—or is considering creating—a Corporate Venturing division. Some companies have done so convinced that it is the method to drive their innovation and long-term survival, while others have done so by imitation and to take part in the trend, as just another part of their corporate communication.
The Corporate Venturing area is one of those that most needs competitive and technological intelligence to make good decisions:
Let’s not forget that the Corporate Venture team must closely monitor competitors’ operations in this field, as well as monitor even more closely, if possible, the start-ups that compete with those with which the company collaborates or in which it invests.
Foresight feeds information into Strategic Planning.
When we review the strategic plan, we make the largest set of high-impact decisions in the company. These decisions must be the best informed of all those supported by Competitive Intelligence. But that collection and provision of information cannot be carried out in isolation at a specific moment of need. The information required to review a strategic plan must be gathered continuously, and to be useful from a strategic point of view it must follow a method, such as strategic scenario planning.